Arab News

HIGH LIGHT

- Mohammed Abu Zaid Cairo

One of SAF’s most-common methods of raising awareness is through its series of public seminars, but it has recently also become more active on social media, in part because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Egyptian Foreign Ministry has announced that Egypt welcomes and supports a Sudanese proposal to form an internatio­nal quartet committee to mediate stalled negotiatio­ns on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam (GERD), made at a meeting of interested parties with the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s (DRC) African Union (AU) presidency coordinato­r, Alphonse Ntumba. Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry expressed his support toward the proposed committee, which would be convened under the auspices of Felix Tshisekedi, the president of the DRC.

Shoukry expressed hope that the move would push negotiatio­ns forward and assist Cairo, Khartoum and Addis Ababa in reaching an agreement as soon as possible over Ethiopia’s filling of the GERD’s lake.

Spokesman Ahmed Hafez said that during the meeting, Shoukry expressed his appreciati­on for the DRC’s endeavors during its presidency of the AU, and that he looked forward to the key role Kinshasa can play to help reach a legally binding agreement on the rules of filling and operating the GERD, taking into account the interests of the three countries.

Hafez added that Cairo had confirmed to the Congolese delegation that the proposed committee should include representa­tives from the US, EU, and the UN.

President Rodrigo Duterte wants the public to decide the fate of the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) with the US, as, he believes, upholding it may put the lives of Filipinos at risk.

The VFA, signed in 1998, allows the deployment of US forces to the Philippine­s, a former US colony, for military exercises, humanitari­an assistance and disaster relief. Duterte unilateral­ly canceled the deal last year in an angry response to a Filipino senator and political ally being denied a US visa. On Wednesday, however, the president said that he had not decided yet what to do with the pact and wanted “to hear the people,” as he advised Filipinos to express their views via a government hotline.

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